"Heavenly Visions": Drawing Center. (New York).This exhibition, the first major presentation of Shaker "gift" drawings and song manuscripts since 1979, shattered a number of common misconceptions about this centuries-old culture. The pared-down aesthetic one might associate with the Shakers through familiarity with their furniture is nowhere to be found in these bright, minutely detailed works in pen and watercolor on paper. And the widely held notion that making these works constituted a benign pastime for women was countered by the curatorial affirmation of the drawings' powerful social, theological, and aesthetic significance in Shaker culture (not to mention that some of the artists were men). The United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Coming--a charismatic British sect brought to America in 1774 by their leader, Ann Lee--became known as Shaking Quakers, or Shakers, for their dramatic expression of spirit possession in the ecstatic trances and whirling of "instruments," the majority of whom were women. Their visions were transcribed, usually by other women, and presented as gifts to members of the community to provide spiritual encouragement. Produced during the so-called Era of Manifestations The Shakers came under a spiritual revival called the Era of Manifestations, which lasted from the late 1830s to about 1850. According to Shaker tradition, heavenly spirits came to earth, bringing visions, often giving them to young Shaker women, who danced, whirled, spoke in , 1839-60, a period of crisis marked by the group's dwindling dwin·dle v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles v.intr. To become gradually less until little remains. v.tr. To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease. population and the absence of its founders, these works document the spiritual return of "Mother" Ann and other deceased Shaker leaders. The Shakers, whose laws strictly prohibited "pictures or paintings set in frames," referred to these drawings variously as sheets, notices, rolls, hearts, and tokens of love. Writing, especially calligraphy calligraphy (kəlĭg`rəfē) [Gr.,=beautiful writing], skilled penmanship practiced as a fine art. See also inscription; paleography. European Calligraphy In Europe two sorts of handwriting came into being very early. , provides the conceptual framework for the 130 works here. Polly Jane Reed and Sarah Bates Bates , Katherine Lee 1859-1929. American educator and writer best known for her poem "America the Beautiful," written in 1893 and revised in 1904 and 1911. , calligraphers
the pattern of a chess or draft board; used in many circumstances to display the results of mixing a specific number of variables. The variables are listed in columns designated along the horizontal border and the same or different variables in lines along the vertical , an all-seeing eye) and delicate "spirit writing" in indecipherable "tongues," which serves as the image's border in lieu of the forbidden frame. Her 1848 drawing From Mother Ann to Amy Reed reflects the increased emphasis on color and image in gift drawings as the practice continued. Several works reflected a freer approach to imagemaking, such as Semantha Fairbanks and Mary Wicks's entirely abstract collaborative compositions of feathery feath·er·y adj. 1. Covered with or consisting of feathers. 2. Resembling or suggestive of a feather, as in form or lightness. feath black "spirit writing" held in check by geometric ordering devices. A standout that more dramatically defies the Shaker penchant for order and symmetry is the anonymous eight-page Sacred Roll, 1840-43. With its sprawling, blocky letters and awkward symbols, this work suggests something of the urgency and immediacy of the Shaker visionary experience. Although conceptualized as text, a number of the drawings overlap with more conventional genres of art and reflect the influence of a range of other purely visual traditions. The drawings' carefully ordered aesthetic, established by means of tidy geometric compositional devices, grounds them in the larger context of Neoclassical ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism n. A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially: a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form, American art and design. Polly Collins's Emblem of the Heavenly Sphere, 1854, is an unusual portrait gallery of spiritual personages, arranged in a vertical gridlike composition that was likely inspired by tombstone Tombstone, city (1990 pop. 1,220), Cochise co., SE Ariz.; inc. 1881. With its pleasant climate and legendary past, Tombstone is a well-known tourist attraction. The city became a national historic landmark in 1962. carving. The heaven depicted in Hannah Cohoon's Bower of Mulberry Trees, 1854, a highly symbolic, decidedly nonacademic landscape painting, is rivaled only by two versions of her "Blazing Tree" motif, 1845, shimmering shim·mer intr.v. shim·mered, shim·mer·ing, shim·mers 1. To shine with a subdued flickering light. See Synonyms at flash. 2. records of her vision of a supernatural tree with flaming leaves, perhaps the best-known examples of Shaker gift drawings. This exhibition (co-organized with the UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University) UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, where it opened) marked a significant departure from the tendency to value Shaker material culture exclusively for its formal qualities, the legacy of the modernist recuperation recuperation /re·cu·per·a·tion/ (-koo?per-a´shun) recovery of health and strength. recuperation, n the process of recovering health, strength, and mental and emotional vigor. of American folk art. By presenting gift drawings together with song manuscripts and (thanks to several scholarly catalogue essays) situating them within the larger context of Shaker social and religious practices, this exhibition established a new multidisciplinary paradigm with which to consider the complexity of religious visionary art. Though the secular art world might seem an unlikely place to celebrate this body of work, the concept of art as both deeply spiritual and culturally engaged truly resonated here. |
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